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James F. Woodward (born 1941) [citation needed] is a professor emeritus of history and an adjunct professor of physics at California State University, Fullerton.He is best known for a physics hypothesis that he proposed in 1990, later expanded, that predicts several physical effects that he refers to as 'Mach effects'.
James Woodward (physicist), American physicist and historian of science; James H. Woodward, aeronautical engineer, professor and chancellor of UNC Charlotte; James Woodward (philosopher), American philosopher of science
James Francis Woodward (born 1946) [citation needed] is an American philosopher who works mainly in philosophy of science with particular emphasis on causation and scientific explanation. In addition, Woodward has published in moral and political philosophy as well as philosophy of psychology .
James F. Woodward (born 1941), American physicist and historian of science Philip Woodward (1919–2018), British mathematician, radar engineer, and horologist Robert Burns Woodward (1917–1979), American organic chemist; Nobel Prize winner
Jim Woodward may refer to: James F. Woodward (born 1941), professor of history and adjunct professor of physics Jim Woodward (politician) , American politician
In theoretical physics, particularly in discussions of gravitation theories, Mach's principle (or Mach's conjecture [1]) is the name given by Albert Einstein to an imprecise hypothesis often credited to the physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach.
Gen. James “Jim” Mattis, the former defense secretary, has married Christina Lomasney, who works at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland. Mattis has held tight to his Tri-Cities ...
Physicist and historian James Woodward describes another speculative idea: using the principle of inertia to generate thrust through the hypothesied 'Mach Effect'. [66] [67] Woodward suggests that the same physics could allow the artificial creation of wormholes and potentially realise the possibility of space travel across galaxies. [68] [69] [70]